This is the end: When legends die hard

A few years ago, as Bernard Hopkins toppled backward through the ring ropes, landing on the cement floor, a collective gasp rose throughout the Fabulous Forum in Los Angeles, CA.

This was not the way it was supposed to end for the future Hall-of-Famer and ring legend.

Hopkins had engaged in seven competitive rounds with 27 year-old Irish slugger Joe Smith Jr. He was losing the fight, but hanging in--until Father Time knocked on the door.

The 6,000 fans in attendance, who had ventured to The Forum to support Hopkins one last time, left downcast.

Sadly, in sports, an end to a glorious career can be painful to watch.

Any who witnessed Willie Mays stumbling in an attempt to catch a fly ball, or a Johnny Unitas pass fluttering down the field, recalls the sadness of watching greatness ebb.

Boxing, with all its brutality and blood thirst, can be the most punishing sport of all.

In 1951, the legendary Joe Louis faced young gun Rocky Marciano at Madison Square Garden in New York. Louis, whose reign as heavyweight champion is the longest in boxing history, was favored 2-1 over the hard-punching, albeit crude, Marciano.

Louis did pretty well for awhile. His jab tagged Marciano repeatedly. But his legs, and once powerful right hand, let him down. Marciano kept after Louis, flooring him in round eight. A few seconds later, as Louis languished on the ropes with a blank expression on his face, Marciano delivered the coup de grace.

Two left hooks and a right hand sent Louis through the ropes and onto the ring apron. Louis was eventually helped to his feet by a few sympathetic ringside journalists.

"I saw the right hand coming, but I couldn’t do anything about it," Louis said after the fight.